LOGINThe moment the plane touched down in Denver, something tight settled in my chest. It was not loud, nor was it sudden.
It was just there, heavy against my chest like a weight that prevented me from breathing properly. I sat still even after the plane started moving, my eyes on the runway outside, but I wasn’t really seeing it. My mind kept going back to the same words. He’s gone. Your father is dead. I swallowed, my fingers curling slightly against my lap. He had died from a heart attack. That’s what Ronald said. But it didn’t sit right with me. My father wasn’t the kind of man who just died like that. He wouldn't die quietly and it would take time before he would die naturally. He had too many enemies, not to mention the fact that he lived in a world where death always meant something. There was always a reason. So no, I didn’t believe it. Because men like him didn’t just die. They were either taken, betrayed, set up or they saw it coming. My jaw tightened as another thought pushed its way in. The missed call. The one before all this. The one I didn’t answer. He had been trying to talk to me and I didn't bother to answer. For a second, my chest felt too tight, like I couldn’t breathe properly. What if that had been him calling to tell me something? What if he needed me and I just ignored it? The thought wouldn’t leave. Guilt settles heavily on my chest. I should have answered that call. “Nyra.” Marcus’s voice pulled me back. His hand covered mine, warm and steady. “We’re here.” I nodded, even though I didn’t feel ready. He had been trying the whole flight, talking to me, comforting me, being there. But there was so much he didn’t know. He didn’t know who my father really was. He didn’t know the kind of world I came from. It was the kind you don’t just walk away from. And now, I was back in it. The compound looked the same. The same gates, same guards and the same feeling in the air that made you stay alert whether you wanted to or not. The moment I stepped out of the car, everything in me shifted. I noticed things without trying. Where the guards stood. How they moved, where their hands rested. Their weapons, which were always close. It came naturally because of the training. My father made sure of that. I wasn’t just raised in that world, I was built for it. Fighting, reading people, knowing when something was off. I learned early. And standing there now, I realized something. I hadn’t forgotten any of it. Not a single thing. It was still in me, waiting and watching. Just like everyone else. Because the moment I walked in, I felt the eyes on me. People didn’t stop talking, but they noticed. I could feel it. The way they looked. The way their attention shifted. They weren’t just watching. They were thinking, measuring and trying to figure out what I meant being back here. Marcus’s hand brushed my back. “Stay close,” he said quietly. I almost smiled. If only he knew. When I saw the casket, everything slowed down. This was real. My steps felt heavier as I walked closer until I saw him. Ronald. He looked older and tired. It was like the weight of everything had already settled on him. For a moment, he just stared at me. Then his expression broke. “Nyra…” That was all it took. I moved before I could think, and when he pulled me into a hug, something inside me cracked open. The tears came fast, uncontrollable, as I held onto him. I had left them. I had run away from home. But the truth was that I never stopped loving my father. And now he was dead. The burial passed, but I barely followed it. People spoke. Words were said. But it all blurred together. What stood out was something else. The atmosphere. The people around were clinking their glasses, there were low conversations and genuine smiles on their faces. It took me a moment to understand it. But when I did, it made my stomach turn. This was the feeling of relief. Some of them were relieved he was dead. They would see me as a target soon. Marcus leaned closer, saying something soft, but I barely heard him. Because suddenly, I felt it. It was that familiar shift, that presence that I knew anywhere in this world. My body reacted before I even saw him. And when I looked up, there he was. Raze. He was standing across from me. But he was not looking at the casket nor anyone else. His eyes were on me. Just like in the dream I had. My pussy still tingled from the memory. He was looking at me like I still belonged to him. And somehow, no matter how hard I tried to fight it, I knew coming back here would change a lot of things. My chest tightened. This wasn’t a dream. He was actually here. When he moved towards me, every instinct in my body screamed at me to move, to find an excuse but I couldn't. My feet stayed rooted to the ground until he stopped right in front of me. Familiarity and that look of possession and lust swam in his orbs and I swallowed. He was way too close to me. “Nyra.” The way he said my name made something twist inside me. But I forced myself to calm down. “Raze,” I replied. Marcus shifted beside me, their eyes meeting and something violent passed between them. Raze glanced at him briefly before looking back at me. “Who’s this?” he asked. “This is Marcus,” I said. “My fiancé.” I saw it. That small change. His jaw tightened. His eyes darkened. But then he smiled and I knew that this was him controlling himself. “Raze Calder.” Marcus shook his hand. “Marcus.” The handshake was firm. And the whole time, Raze was looking at me. Not Marcus. Me. “We grew up together,” I added. It sounded small like I was trying to make it less than it was. Because what we had wasn’t that simple. We had passion and nights we fucked till morning. Anger flashed in his eyes. But he didn’t say anything. But the look he gave me said enough. This wasn’t over. “I'm sorry about your dad, Nyra,” Raze finally said and I nodded, not trusting my voice. Standing there, my mind drifted without warning. A memory played in my head. I was younger, trying to balance on a bicycle that felt too big for me. My father stood behind me, holding it steady. “I’m going to fall,” I said. “You won’t,” he replied. “Promise?” He didn’t answer. He just said, “Keep moving forward. Don’t look back.” And then, he let go. I didn’t realize at first. Not until I was riding on my own. Not until I turned and lost balance. I blinked, the memory fading as I looked at the grave. My father was gone. And just like that, I was on my own again.Weeks now, and the compound had stopped holding its breath.I noticed it the way you notice weather that has finally settled, not all at once but in retrospect, some morning arriving where the difference registered as fact rather than relief. The kitchen sounds two floors down had found a rhythm instead of a hesitation. The guard rotation crossed the yard without anyone glancing toward the house first to check whether today required something different of them. Carver's men ran drills at seven because it was seven, not because seven was the hour someone had decided might matter.I stood at the study window with my hands flat on the desk behind me and watched the yard do what it did every morning now, which was nothing in particular, and understood that nothing in particular was the thing my father had spent his whole life trying to build.He hadn't gotten to see it.I had.I thought about the first morning back, three months ago now, the way the compound had watched me then. Not hosti
I slept four hours and woke at 05:50 to a compound already settling into its morning, the kitchen sounds starting two floors below, a door somewhere in the east wing, the unhurried rhythm of a place that had stopped holding its breath sometime in the last several weeks without announcing when.I dressed without deciding to hurry.The corridor outside my room held the same grey light it always held at this hour, flattening everything into the version of itself that existed before the day arrived to give it color back, and I walked through it the way I had walked through it every morning since the gates first let me back in, except that this morning nothing in my chest was running ahead of my feet. I had nowhere I needed to be that I wasn't already, eventually, on my way to.I went down through the main hall and out the east door.The yard opened in front of me wider than it had any right to, the way it always opened at this hour before the day's business filled it with bodies and purpo
I read the letter at 19:40, after the compound had gone quiet enough that no part of me was listening for it.I had read the first three pages before, in pieces, on the night Silas handed me the envelope and told me to read it alone, and I had carried what I'd read since then the way I carried everything, filed and weighted and drawn on when the moment required it. But I had not read it the way I read it now, start to finish, at his desk, in his chair, with nothing left outside the door that needed me more than this did.I unfolded the four pages and smoothed them flat against the wood.The first page was the network. The architecture, named plainly, no metaphor, the seven nodes and what each one carried and why he had sequenced them the way he had. I read it the way I had read it the first time, fast, for the shape of the thing, because the first page had always been the part that was easiest to receive.The second page was Silas. Anchor. The fourteen months of holding instead of clo
Voss was brought to the holding room at 10:00, and I went to him instead of having him brought to me, because some things are owed in the room where a man is being kept and not in a room where he can mistake the meeting for leverage.He was sitting when I came in. He stood, which surprised me, and then I understood it wasn't courtesy. It was a man squaring himself before he handed something over that he intended to be the last thing he ever handed me."You said you had one more piece," I said."I do." He looked at the wall behind me for a moment, the way men look at a wall when the thing they're about to say has nowhere else to land first. "Your father's last six months. Not the operational picture. The man.""Go on.""He knew about a second exposure point in the network eleven months before he died. Not Silas. Something smaller, a courier route through the western contacts that Croft had partially mapped." Voss's jaw worked once. "He could have closed it in a week. Cut the route, reb
The dormant node woke at 06:12.Fen called me down before she touched anything else, which was correct, which was the only thing to do with a channel my father had built and sealed and never named to anyone outside the three people who needed to know it existed. I came into the relay room still in yesterday's shirt and found her standing back from the terminal the way you stand back from a thing that has just proven it was never actually dead."It's the eastern node," she said. "The one Ada flagged as gone dark.""It wasn't dark. It was waiting.""For what.""For someone to use it." I looked at the screen. One line of incoming traffic, routed through four relays before it landed, the kind of routing a man used when he wanted the message to arrive and the sender to stay unprovable. "Authenticate the header. I want to know it's not Voss's people testing the channel."She ran it. Thirty seconds. "Clean signature. Not spoofed. It's real.""Print it. Don't forward it anywhere. Not to Carve
The room hadn't finished being quiet before he was already moving.He came around the table the way he never moved during a meeting, unhurried, certain, no trace left of the man who'd just sat across from her taking reports with his hands flat and still. I straightened from where I'd been leaning over the supply notes and let him close the distance without saying a word, because there was nothing left to say that the last hour hadn't already said for us. He'd watched the whole room defer to me without hesitation. He'd watched me close a meeting the way my father used to close one, certain, unbothered, and something in his face now carried the weight of having seen it land."You ran that room like it was always yours," he said, low, stopping close enough that I had to tip my head back to hold his eyes."It is.""I know."That was all. He reached for my waist and I let him take it, no negotiation in the touch, none needed, because the air between us had already been settled before he cr
He was in the room when I got back. Not waiting, working, the map on the desk, the north perimeter overlay spread beside it, his pen moving. He looked up when I came through the door and read my face the way he read everything, which was completely and without asking.I sat on the edge of the bed a
I went to him at 19:00, when the compound had finished its evening rotation and the corridors had the quality they got after dinner, not quiet exactly, more settled, the building exhaling.His door was closed. I knocked once."Come in."He was at his desk. Not working, the desk was clear, which mea
The perimeter walk took forty minutes.I hadn't planned it. I woke before the compound did, in the grey before the light found its color, and lay still for a moment with my inventory running, ceiling, the quality of the sound, Raze's breathing slow and even beside me, and then I rose without waking
The east corridor was still running its aftermath when I found him.Not loud, the compound didn't run loud, not even now, not even with three fronts behind us and Voss zip-tied in the west holding room and the archive green across seven nodes. What it ran was purposeful. Carver's men cycling throug







